Amazon Is Slow to Fix Its Kindle Fire Problems

After months of Kindle Fire complaints
, Amazon has finally promised a fix, coming in two weeks -- over a month and a half since the device first came out -- the company toldThe New York Times's David Streitfeld. The fix doesn't address some of the most common complaints, but it is the first admission the company
has made to the device having some problems. Even so, Amazon says the device has sold well and ratings haven't tanked.

Since the Kindle Fire came out in mid-November,
users have
had trouble connecting to WiFi,
have reported slow browsing, have complained of privacyissues, and have lamented the volume and on and off switches. The current update will contain "improvements in performance and multitouch navigation, and customers will have the option of editing the list of
items that show what they have recently been doing," writes Steitfeld. Presumably the "improvements in performance" will address some of that speed
stuff, but nowhere in there does it guarantee a Web browsing fix and there's no mention of WiFi -- kind of a big problem for a tablet that has no 3G
capabilities and just relies on WiFi to get users connected.